INVESTMENT STRATEGY. Volatility Returns. us.cibc.com/private-wealth

Similar documents
NOVEMBER Asset Allocation Committee Update

ANOTHER TOUGH WEEK COMMENTARY REASSURANCE KEY TAKEAWAYS LPL RESEARCH WEEKLY MARKET. October

PERSPECTIVE ON MARKET VOLATILITY

Key takeaways. What it may mean for investors FIRST A NALYSIS NEWS OR EVENTS T HAT MAY AFFECT Y OUR INVESTMENTS. Global Investment Strategy Team

WILL YIELDS KEEP RISING?

Economic and Financial Markets Monthly Review & Outlook Detailed Report January 2018

STRONG WEEK AHEAD OF BIG WEEKEND

Economic and Financial Markets Monthly Review & Outlook Detailed Report October 2017

Q Market Update

Fed Delivers Another December Rate Hike

Recap of 2017 Markets and Economy

As Good as it Gets Title of Goldman Sachs Research Paper, November 15, 2017

Eric C. Elbell, CFA, CAIA Area Senior Vice President. Kyongdo Min, CPA, CFA Area Vice President. April 11, 2018

CORRECTION PERSPECTIVES

Global Equity Strategy Report

WILL EIGHT BE GREAT FOR THE BULL?

Fourth Quarter Market Outlook. Kim Huebner, CFA Don Powell, CFA Joseph Styrna, CFA

Time to adjust the sails

CORPORATE BEIGE BOOK COMMENTARY

Rising Yields Begin to Bite

BCA 4Q 2018 Review and 2019 Outlook Russ Allen, CIO. Summary Outlook

"Phenomenal" Expectations

Bah Humbug: U.S. Markets Tumble to Yearly Lows After Fed Guidance Projects More Rate Hikes for 2019

Asset Allocation Model March Update

Economic Views Brief OPTIMISM DOMINATES THE 2018 OUTLOOK.

HOPE FOR ROTATION. So, let me talk a little about each of these. Tariffs. Tariffs are restrictions to trade; they are a tax and they cause inflation.

FOURTH QUARTER EARNINGS SEASON

The Stock Market's Final Four

Positioning Equity Portfolios for When Rates Rise

RS LARGE CAP GROWTH STRATEGY QUARTERLY COMMENTARY

What Is Behind the Equity Sell-Off?

Leumi. Global Economics Monthly Review. Arie Tal, Research Economist. July 12, Capital Markets Division, Economics Department. leumiusa.

BUYING AT RECORD HIGHS

Goldman Sachs Asset Allocation Portfolios Investment Outlook

(Sources: Barron s 4/1/2019, Wall Street Journal 3/30-31/ 2019)

Cash Management Portfolios

Mixed Signals from the U.S. Economy

Third Quarter Market Review

NO PAIN, NO GAIN: 2016 MAY REQUIRE TOLERANCE FOR VOLATILITY

EARNINGS UPDATE: FIVE OBSERVATIONS COMMENTARY FIVE KEY OBSERVATIONS KEY TAKEAWAYS LPL RESEARCH WEEKLY MARKET. February

FIVE KEYS TO EMERGING MARKET OUTLOOK John Lynch Chief Investment Strategist, LPL Financial Jeffrey Buchbinder, CFA Equity Strategist, LPL Financial

U.S. Equity Market Report

A secular bear in bonds? Not so fast

The Harbour Group of RBC Dominion Securities

Commentary from New Century Advisors - February 2019

2018 FIXED INCOME OUTLOOK

HSBC World Selection Portfolio Quarterly Report Q4 2018

Market Month: November 2018 The Markets (as of market close November 30, 2018)

Is the lag in Dividend Paying Stocks versus the TSX behind us?

April 2018 Economic Outlook

Show Me the Money? ECONOMIC RESEARCH. Robert Kavcic, Senior Economist December 7, 2018

Investment Strategy Outlook

THE 1987 CRASH: A NOT SO HAPPY ANNIVERSARY

MIDYEAR OUTLOOK 2017 COMMENTARY

E*TRADE STUDY REVEALS BULLISH SENTIMENT COOLS AMID POSITIVE ECONOMIC INDICATORS

Q EARNINGS PREVIEW:

st Quarter Review

Fourth Quarter Market Outlook. Jason Bulinski, CFA Donald A. Powell, CFA Joseph Styrna, CFA

Market Insight: Turn Down the News Volume, Listen to the Market

Market volatility and trade tensions set the tone April 2018

Active Balanced portfolios Q4 2018

OUT OF THE WOODS? COMMENTARY STRONG FUNDAMENTALS KEY TAKEAWAYS LPL RESEARCH WEEKLY MARKET. February

Fixed income market update. March BMO Fixed Income Brickell Bay Dr. Suite 2100 Miami, Florida bmogam.

- Stocks and credit sensitive bonds sold off in the fourth quarter of 2018 capping off the worst December since 1931.

Market Outlook By Mark Connolly, Principal, New Castle Investment Advisors, LLC. Prepared January 15, 2018

FINANCIAL LETTER SUMMARY. Market Review

Global Economic and Market Outlook for Gavyn Davies, Chairman, Fulcrum Asset Management

Inflation Talk Dividend Strategy under the Rising Rate Environment

BALANCED CORE COMMENTARY

Themes of 2018 ECONOMIC RESEARCH. Robert Kavcic, Senior Economist December 21, Market Performance as of December 21, 2018

THE SKINNY THIRD QUARTER 2018

Commentary from New Century Advisors January 2019

NEW THINKING. The Trump Tailwinds

Quarterly Economic Update

IMPRESSIVE EARNINGS SEASON

EQUITY STRATEGY FOCUS January, 2018

NVIT Investor Destinations Funds

U.S. Equity Market Chart Book

U.S. Equity Market Chart Book

November 12, A recap of last week s top economic news and what s to come

2018 MID YEAR OUTLOOK

WILL GOLD CONTINUE TO SHINE?

2017 was a Banner Year Look for a More Normal 2018

UPDATE ON GROWTH AND VALUE STOCKS

MELT-UP OR MELT-DOWN?

Prudential International Investments Advisers, LLC. Global Investment Strategy May 2008

Term Deposit Review: January 2019

Fixed Income Strategy

THE STOCK MARKET S FINAL FOUR FACTORS

Policy, Politics & Portfolios

Market Insight: It s Nasty Out There Is This a Bear Market?

A VERY GOOD SIX MONTHS FOR SMALL CAPS. Russell 2000, Relative Performance vs. Russell Jul May Mar Jun 2014.

Investment Strategy Outlook May 10, 2017

Are Investors Buying into the Equity Story?

FIRST QUARTER EARNINGS PREVIEW

February Looking Back: 2017 Market Review

Global Macroeconomic Monthly Review

EARNINGS UPDATE: RAISING THE BAR

Market/Index 2017 Close Prior Month As of November 30 Month Change YTD Change DJIA % 3.31%

Balancing Act: Weighing optimism and caution

Transcription:

INVESTMENT FINANCIAL STRARTEGY MARKETS VOLATILITY MONITOR RETURNS INVESTMENT STRATEGY Volatility Returns 1

The S&P 500 has dropped over six consecutive trading sessions and is now 7% below the all-time high reached on September 20, 2018. This follows a strong third quarter (+7.2%) the best in more than four years. Here is where U.S. equity returns stand on a year-to-date basis as of the market close on October 11, 2018: Year-to-Date Total Returns 8% 7% 7.1% 6% 5% 4% 3.6% 3% 2% 1.6% 1% 0% S&P 500 NASDAQ Russell 2000 Source: Bloomberg, as of 10.11.2018. FACTORS BEHIND THE SELLOFF While a spike in volatility can be unnerving, it is a normal part of the market cycle. There are myriad theories on why the strong upswing in the third quarter has abruptly reversed course in October. 2

We would cite two as the most dominant: 1. The interest rate outlook; and 2. Heightened concern over the U.S./China trade dispute Interest Rates. The 10-year Treasury rose 0.25% over 14 trading sessions, hitting 3.25% on Monday (since receded to 3.14%). This was due to a rise in real yields due to strength in the economy and a more hawkish tone from the Federal Reserve. Chairman Powell made it clear that he views the economy as strong enough to handle a normalization of interest rates and that Fed policy was still a long way from neutral. 1 In recent days, equity investors have shifted their interest rate assumptions higher, which implicitly argues for a slightly lower multiple on the stock market. We view this reassessment as more realistic consistent with our view that both U.S. economic growth and inflation will run higher than consensus in the quarters ahead. Though these bouts of volatility feel new every time, we have seen this movie before. Bond market volatility frequently precedes stock market volatility. A look back to the beginning of the year is instructive. After a meteoric rise in the first four weeks of January, the S&P 500 tumbled just over 10% in nine trading sessions. The proximate cause of the correction? some tough talk from the Fed, an upside surprise inflation report and a quick 0.25% increase in the 10-year Treasury yield. U.S./China Trade Dispute. Much of the concern has been prospective ( if the dispute drags out, it will be a problem ). However, over the last few days a small group of companies in the industrial and luxury goods sectors reported that the tariff dispute is already negatively impacting their earnings, either due to weaker demand from Chinese customers or higher input costs. Q3 earnings season has barely begun, so investors may have jumped to the conclusion that this will be an oft repeated story in the hundreds of earnings releases in the weeks ahead. The boom in corporate profits has been the single biggest support for the bull market this year, so it s somewhat understandable that anything challenging that optimism would cause a risk off impulse. It s important to remember that most companies do not have major exposure to China, and it s unlikely that those who do will all have a China problem starting with Q3 earnings. While we do not think that China issues will materially detract from what should again be a very strong earnings quarter, it is appropriate for the U.S. equity market to discount more risk on the China story over the next few months. It is quite possible that after the midterm elections, the Trump Administration will ratchet up its tariff and other trade protection tools against China. 3

WHY HAS THE TECH SECTOR GOTTEN HIT SO HARD? October is notorious as a regression to the mean month for equity sectors. Sure enough, the leading sectors for the first nine months of the year technology and consumer discretionary are the biggest laggards in October. Consumer staples and financials, significant underperformers for most of the year, are outperforming this month. The technology sector has above average exposure to the two factors previously mentioned the interest rate cycle and China. Most technology stocks are truly longduration assets, and potentially more sensitive to fluctuations in the outlook for interest rates. Many also do substantial business in China. These risks have largely been overwhelmed by strong earnings growth, but there will now be enormous scrutiny on third quarter profit reports in the weeks ahead. THE OUTLOOK As always, calling a bottom to these market downdrafts is a fool s errand. We re not too far from a 10% correction and all the dramatic headlines that go along with that. Volatility may endure in the short term. It s important to remember that pullbacks and corrections are a normal part of a bull market, and that we ve been blessed with precious few of them in this cycle. This does not look like the beginning of a bear market. Economic and earnings strength, inflation that is well behaved and investor sentiment that is anything but complacent or euphoric suggest that this is a mid-course correction, appropriately factoring in two issues that were perhaps ignored earlier rising interest rates and the economic implications of a trade dispute between the two largest economies in the world. The themes outlined in our recently published Financial Markets Monitor still apply: A decade after the financial crisis, the U.S. economy is in mid-cycle form. Growth is solid, and inflation is firming slightly but is close to the Fed s target. Other regions of the world are facing more economic headwinds than the U.S., complicated by trade frictions and China s growth and policy path. The Fed s course of gradual rate hikes should continue in 2019. Many central banks will likely move in the same direction, resulting in global monetary policy tightening next year. The impact of a full employment economy and Fed policy should produce moderately higher interest rates across the yield curve. Cresting of economic and profit growth over the next few quarters will probably slow, but not end, the equity bull market. 4

Disclosure INVESTMENT STRARTEGY VOLATILITY RETURNS 1 CNBC.com, 10.03.2018. CIBC Private Wealth Management includes CIBC National Trust Company (a limited-purpose national trust company), CIBC Delaware Trust Company (a Delaware limited-purpose trust company), CIBC Private Wealth Advisors, Inc. (a registered investment adviser) all of which are wholly owned subsidiaries of CIBC Private Wealth Group, LLC and the private wealth division of CIBC Bank USA. All of these entities are wholly owned subsidiaries of Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. This document is intended for informational purposes only, and the material presented should not be construed as an offer or recommendation to buy or sell any security. Concepts expressed are current as of the date of this document only and may change without notice. Such concepts are the opinions of our investment professionals, many of whom are Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA ) charterholders or CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER professionals. Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc. owns the certification marks CFP and CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER in the U.S. There is no guarantee that these views will come to pass. Past performance does not guarantee future comparable results. The tax information contained herein is general and for informational purposes only. CIBC Private Wealth Management does not provide legal or tax advice, and the information contained herein should only be used in consultation with your legal, accounting and tax advisers. To the extent that information contained herein is derived from third-party sources, although we believe the sources to be reliable, we cannot guarantee their accuracy. The CIBC logo is a registered trademark of CIBC, used under license. Approved 3037-18. Investment Products Offered are Not FDIC-Insured, May Lose Value and are Not Bank Guaranteed. 5